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Ariah, by B. R. Sanders
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Ariah's magical training has been interrupted. Forced to rely on a mentor, Dirva, who is not who he claims to be, and a teacher who is foreign and powerful, Ariah is drawn into a culture wholly different from the elven one that raised him. As his friendship with Dirva's brother blossoms into a surprising romance, and he slowly learns how to control the dangerous magic in his blood, life finally appears to be coming together for Ariah—but love and security are cut short by a tyrannical military empire bent on expanding its borders. War, betrayal, passion, and confusion follow Ariah as his perilous journey leads him beyond the walls of the Empire, and into unfamiliar territory within himself. Along the way, he’ll discover just how much he’s willing to give up to find his place in the world, and he’ll learn what it means to sacrifice himself for freedom—and for love.
- Sales Rank: #2229643 in Books
- Published on: 2015-06-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.00" h x .90" w x 6.00" l, 1.17 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 396 pages
Review
Awards
Winner of the 2016 Bisexual Book of the Year Award for Speculative Fiction
Finalist for 2016 Bisexual Writer of the Year Award
Included on the 2016 Tiptree Award Longlist
"Sanders shows significant promise as a writer to watch. I look forward to seeing what they do next."- Liz Bourke, Tor.com
"Ariah embodies the true potential of Bildungsroman in terms of theprotagonist's journey to adulthood, and that its intelligent, powerful,emotive discussion of gender, sexuality, culture, racism, imperialism,language, family, love, autonomy and personhood, among other things, isevocative of the best aspects of both Katherine Addison's The GoblinEmperor and Ann Leckie's Ancillary Justice...Ariah is an intelligent,powerful, skilfully written, diverse novel-exactly the kind of thing weneed to see more of in SFF." - Foz Meadows, Tor.com
About the Author
B R Sanders is a genderqueer writer who lives and works inDenver, CO, with their family and two cats. Outside of writing, B's twogreat loves are coffee and sleep. Alas, managing these loves is aneternal struggle. B has published another novel set in the Aerdhuniverse, Resistance, and has published several fantasy and sciencefiction short stories. B blogs about reading and writing fiction atbrsanderswrites.com and tweets @B_R_Sanders.
Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Bildungsroman fantasy that gets in your head...
By Blanca Welsh
Admittingly, this book is much different from fantasy I usually read. It's more of a bildungsroman fantasy genre book. By those not familiar with that way of storytelling, it deals with a main character going through a psychological journey, moral growth or both, who for the most part will experience new things and look for answers to new questions as they experience them.
Most times, the main character's strongest conflict is with the values of their society.
It's more literary fiction than say, Lord of The Rings.
With that being said, it's a really interesting book that addresses Gender, Sexuality and explores Polyamourous relationships.
Everything sets into motion when Ariah, the titular character, is set on a journey to apprentice with a mentor who can help him navigate his magic.
Ariah is a mimic and closeted shaper. He can draw out emotions and shape them or in turn feel them himself. Sometimes it was confusing for him, especially when he's forced to follow his mentor Dirva, to Dirva's hometown.
Some of the racial politics were a tad confusing. There were different races of elves, then there were Qin which I think were human? I didn't really read a ton of fantasy books with elves growing up, so maybe I'm missing an unspoken system for different colors/species elves fall under. Sometimes the book didn't always stop to explain it, just expecting me to know. It wasn't a deal breaker, I just didn't follow every detail, so when it came back, I was confused again.
I'm a bit ashamed to say that based on the cover and his description, I cannoned him white. If I'm not mistaken he's not white, but I think I would've taken something different from him if I'd known before I finished the book. Especially because more than a few of his love interests were Black, and I'm all about that Blasian. That's the main reason I would've taken something different from it. Blasian depictions are so rare it's embarrassing.
That kind of info will have me live tweeting as I read, telling everyone I know, and tagging it like crazy on social media. Like I said, I'm all about that Blasian.
It also highlights polyamourous relationships, which sadly get a bad rap based on monogamous relationships being the greater majority. Ariah came into his own sexuality, but I was a little disappointed that the thought of sleeping with a dude wasn't appealing to him, even though he was in love with Sorcha, one of his main love interests. He slept with women on the drop of a hat. As he came into himself, I wondered why(without giving a spoiler alert, which is really hard to do because it's so relevant!) Sorcha had to showcase femininity to justify his attraction to him.
But I'm glad it's actually addressing polyamorous relationships. I think when I was young, I used to think monogamy was the only answer, but educating myself on the subject, I see that 5+4 and 6+3 can both bring the same answer. Books like to paint the idea that there is only one person you're allowed to be in love with. I should be clear, that Ariah did not experience a love triangle. He had multiple love interests. At least two of the main people he was in love with were also(or at least how I saw it) in love with other people, and each love was valid.
But the topic of Gender came up in a better "even a fool should be learning something from this" kind of way. Ariah, much like most people in our society don't know how to address folks who don't identify as He or She. I'm learning myself to not automatically attach gender without first asking what a person prefers(really hard with a grocery cashier btw) and Ariah lived in a bubble where other pronouns were used.
It confused him to be surrounded by non-binary or those who chose not to adhere to a gender at all(cuz there's literally like a million XD). I'm sure there are more books that address this, but this just happens to be the first book I've read that addressed Gender Diversity. I look forward to finding more, as long as they're done with the same amount of respect as this book.
I wish Ariah would've been described more. I feel like a jerk for seeing him as a white dude.
And on a much less serious note, what was Ariah smoking every other chapter?
Ariah stayed gettin' high. He was supposed to be training, and it affected his training, yet he stayed smoking an L XD
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Wonderful Journey
By K.C. Gray
When I first started reading this, I thought I'd wind up giving it three stars. There are some issues with repetition throughout the text, but for some reason it came across as more prevelant, and therefore more distracting, in the beginning of the novel. For example, a description of characters was written like:
"They looked nothing alike. I saw absolutely no family resemblance."
Many of the descriptions came across like this, and in the beginning, they felt unnecessary.
Also, there were descriptions that, if added, would have heightened my sense of immersion into the story. For instance, I thought the main character was female for the first few pages. I also had a great deal of trouble imagining the city and the train, so I went to default human buildings, which didn't seem to match the characters.
And then, as I continued reading, the rating in my mind went up one star. Despite repetitious statements, the prose is smooth and easy to follow. I was fully immersed at some places, and can still imagine these scenes vividly.
Along with these positives, I came across beautiful imagery and wordings, like:
"The sun sat low on the horizon, bloody and wounded."
"Black skin that drank in the light."
"The image of her profile silhouetted against the flickering orange light is burned into my mind, a fixed point in time. It's one of those indelible memories that serves to organize a remembered life."
There is so much from this book that will stick with me.
The main focus of the story is not a villain or saving another person (the main character does get saved on many occasions, and on many more he saves others), but it's more about the character's growth. The main character, Ariah, is prime and proper, unsure of himself, but as the book continues, he goes on many adventures and finds himself in the process. In other words, the more Ariah experience, the more he realized what he did and did not like.
The author handles the character growth in a brilliant way. Ariah isn't stuck in one place, learning who he is. He travels all over the "country", lands in new settings, around different types of people, and it's these new experiences that causes him to look at the world a different way. In many of these adventures, there is danger and that need to continue reading to find out what happens, but these things are not the focus of this novel.
In some ways, this reminded me of Ursula Le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness. There is an exploration of sexuality, and many of the characters come across as gender fluid
In the end, I wound up with a solid five stars on my mind. I thoroughly enjoyed the journey Ariah went on, and when it was over, I felt overwhelming sadness.
Ariah's journey resonated with me on a personal level, and I loved that in the end he knew himself so well that he left comforts and took one final trip back to those he loved.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Lush fantasy
By L. R. Richardson
Ariah is a coming of age tale of a young elf named Ariah. He learns from a mentor, travels to different lands, does a few different jobs, and tries to find out what he actually wants out of life and how and who he wants to love. There are numerous different coloured elves in this world, and there’s a complicated political system between them all. Ariah is marginalised, having to hide certain powers he possesses and only able to work certain jobs.
This is not a fast-paced, action-heavy fantasy. Rather, it is pensive and takes its time unfurling. The plot is a bit meandering, perhaps—there’s not a very clear overall arc other than Ariah finding himself, and sometimes it can jump a few years. The book examines gender and sexuality in numerous ways, as different elves have different gender structures, marriage rites and practices, and more. There are several nonbinary characters, and the book is written by a genderqueer author. The prose is crisp and beautiful. Pick up if you like lush fantasy that takes its time exploring the world and the characters.
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